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College Highlights
UK Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center construction moving ahead
In 2008, the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture broke ground on a $28.5 million expansion and renovation of UK's Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center. A year later, the construction is progressing briskly and was recently celebrated with a "topping off" ceremony to signify that all structural steel for the expansion is in place.
LDDC Director Craig Carter said two 10,000-pound alkaline digesters should be installed before the end of the year.
"We're looking forward to the facility being ‘dried-in' soon," he said. "Hopefully by mid- to late- summer our new necropsy facility and a new administration wing will be finished as well."
Carter said the expansion is what enabled the center's recent full, national accreditation.
"It will also help us move forward in joining the National Animal Health Laboratory Network, which is an initiative of the U.S. Department of Agriculture," he added. "On a practical level, the new space will open up a lot of lab space in the main building and bring with it updates in air quality and biosafety, which are invaluable improvements. We'll have more room to conduct testing, an increased capacity for necropsies, and it will enable us to better handle any large disease outbreak."
The Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center is a full-service animal health diagnostic facility. Its faculty and staff handle one of the largest caseloads in the nation, seeing 60,000 clinical cases and averaging over 3,000 necropsies (animal autopsies) each year. The laboratory also protects public health by diagnosing many diseases that can potentially cross over into the public sector.
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UK is leader in $6 million study of medicinal plants
The University of Kentucky is the lead institute in a group of universities that received a $6 million grant from the National Institutes of Health as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to study the molecular genetics and biochemical potential of medicinal plants.
"Our major goal is to capture the genetic blueprints of medicinal plants for the advancement...
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Horse genome publication concludes project initiated in Lexington
Four researchers from the University of Kentucky Maxwell H. Gluck Equine Research Center and a faculty member in UK's Department of Computer Science were among 58 co-authors of a research article published Nov. 6 in Science that reported the first complete sequencing and assembly of the horse genome....
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UK, KSU receive grant to train beginning farmers
Backed by a nearly $750,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Kentucky Cooperative Extension will offer a comprehensive training program for beginning farmers and those who are thinking about taking up farming.
The Kentucky's whole farm management education program, A Common Field, is a two-year course offered in...
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